What is the best way to get a job in communications?

What is a good way for me to get a job that pays a decent amount as a teenager?

  • Hi i'm looking for a job that pays quite a bit of money. I am 16 years old and 17 years old in august, I want to get a job so I can start buying things for paintball which is very expensive. I have never had a job before and I want one, not only for money, but also so I can get some things down for my college essays. I am very responsible and also very Intelligent and respectful. I work very hard and do everything as best as possible. However, I have never had a previous job or anything that can show I have any experience. I also am sort of shy, but after i know people for a while, people really like me. I don't want to work on saturday and sunday, only one day or the other and I would like a lot of hours at any job that pays good, or any job that I enjoy, I sort of want to get a job that tips like being a waiter or something but I feel like it would be very tough and there would be a lot of pressure, and if I screw something up, I would feel embarrassed and that wouldn't be a job I would want to handle. Lastly I have different HW amounts on different days, its all random so is there jobs where you can call in and ask if you can cancle after school these days or is that not something you should do. Thanks

  • Answer:

    I have a couple ideas, but they are online ideas, so because of your age, you'll need some help from your parents to get accounts set up. Are you good at writing? If so, you could write articles and blog posts for website owners for money. A well-written, 400 word +, optimized article will bring you about $5. It may take a little practice to write an "optimized" style - including specified keywords early on in your articles, including a couple "long tail" keywords in the article, etc. but not that big of a deal after a little practice. I think Associated Content at least used to pay for articles, there are also plenty of writing gigs on freelance websites such as ScriptLance, Freelancer, Getacoder, etc. You could also try fiverr.com. Go there and look at some of the gigs, and copy one that you think you could do. Maybe give eBay a shot. If you have any stuff that is worth something that you don't want or need any more, list it. Ask your buddies if they have anything that they want to sell, and offer to sell it for them on eBay for a cut. You could even try "eBay arbitrage", where you buy something off of eBay and then resell it there for a profit. Some sellers do not include important keywords in the title, give a poor description, poor pictures (or none at all), etc. All this stuff can scare potential buyers away, decreasing the competition and probably the final price. You could possibly buy the items and make a much better listing, and possibly profit. Sellers may misspell the main keywords in the title as well, meaning most potential buyers will never find them. You could try a misspelling search using a site like Typojoe.com to hopefully find some of these items and possibly get some great deals. You could also use a site like Ebuyersedge.com to set up saved eBay searches. You'd get an e-mail whenever a matching item is newly listed. Especially good for "Buy It Now"s that are priced right. You could set up your saved searches and then from there all you would be doing would be checking e-mails when you get them sent to you and looking at the items, so there should not be a whole lot of time involved in setting up your "system". You'd have the jump on other potential buyers. Or, if you find something you want listed an auction format, use a sniping service such as Hidbid.com to place your bid for you. It'll bid in the last few seconds, helping you to save money and avoid shill bidding. You could also try your local thrift stores, Goodwill, auctions, yard sales, Craigslist, etc. to source products. Having a smart phone with internet access would be a big help with this. You could check prices of completed listings immediately, deciding if there's enough room for profit for you to buy a particular item. It seems there should always be room for smaller sellers on eBay for used items. Or, rather than selling a physical product, maybe try offering a service on eBay. Maybe writing articles, creating graphics, whatever it is that you would be good enough at to charge for. For longer-term, you could learn search engine optimization, social media traffic generation, etc. and then charge webmasters for your services. If you are good, you can make some serious money doing those things. Another long-term idea, create your own website (about $10 a year for a domain name, $5 a month for hosting) and earn money from Adsence, affiliate products (you can check out Clickbank.com and Commission Junction to see thousands of products that you could promote and earn money from for any sales that you generate), selling banner space to other webmasters, etc. If you started on one of these things now and one clicked for you, you could be the next Internet and mobile by the time you graduate.

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I have a couple ideas, but they are online ideas, so because of your age, you'll need some help from your parents to get accounts set up. Are you good at writing? If so, you could write articles and blog posts for website owners for money. A well-written, 400 word +, optimized article will bring you about $5. It may take a little practice to write an "optimized" style - including specified keywords early on in your articles, including a couple "long tail" keywords in the article, etc. but not that big of a deal after a little practice. I think Associated Content at least used to pay for articles, there are also plenty of writing gigs on freelance websites such as ScriptLance, Freelancer, Getacoder, etc. You could also try fiverr.com. Go there and look at some of the gigs, and copy one that you think you could do. Maybe give eBay a shot. If you have any stuff that is worth something that you don't want or need any more, list it. Ask your buddies if they have anything that they want to sell, and offer to sell it for them on eBay for a cut. You could even try "eBay arbitrage", where you buy something off of eBay and then resell it there for a profit. Some sellers do not include important keywords in the title, give a poor description, poor pictures (or none at all), etc. All this stuff can scare potential buyers away, decreasing the competition and probably the final price. You could possibly buy the items and make a much better listing, and possibly profit. Sellers may misspell the main keywords in the title as well, meaning most potential buyers will never find them. You could try a misspelling search using a site like Typojoe.com to hopefully find some of these items and possibly get some great deals. You could also use a site like Ebuyersedge.com to set up saved eBay searches. You'd get an e-mail whenever a matching item is newly listed. Especially good for "Buy It Now"s that are priced right. You could set up your saved searches and then from there all you would be doing would be checking e-mails when you get them sent to you and looking at the items, so there should not be a whole lot of time involved in setting up your "system". You'd have the jump on other potential buyers. Or, if you find something you want listed an auction format, use a sniping service such as Hidbid.com to place your bid for you. It'll bid in the last few seconds, helping you to save money and avoid shill bidding. You could also try your local thrift stores, Goodwill, auctions, yard sales, Craigslist, etc. to source products. Having a smart phone with internet access would be a big help with this. You could check prices of completed listings immediately, deciding if there's enough room for profit for you to buy a particular item. It seems there should always be room for smaller sellers on eBay for used items. Or, rather than selling a physical product, maybe try offering a service on eBay. Maybe writing articles, creating graphics, whatever it is that you would be good enough at to charge for. For longer-term, you could learn search engine optimization, social media traffic generation, etc. and then charge webmasters for your services. If you are good, you can make some serious money doing those things. Another long-term idea, create your own website (about $10 a year for a domain name, $5 a month for hosting) and earn money from Adsence, affiliate products (you can check out Clickbank.com and Commission Junction to see thousands of products that you could promote and earn money from for any sales that you generate), selling banner space to other webmasters, etc. If you started on one of these things now and one clicked for you, you could be the next Internet and mobile by the time you graduate.

Phoenix 013

Everybody wants what you want. Maybe you will be lucky. Never cancel showing up on short notice, that is a no no.

smkeller

Everybody wants what you want. Maybe you will be lucky. Never cancel showing up on short notice, that is a no no.

smkeller

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